A heavy-duty gun with excellent performance at a low price. Includes a tactical rail system on the top and front sides for accessories. Fires at an amazing 350 FPS with .12g BBs and 300 FPS with .20g BBs. We recommend using only .20g BBs for best accuracy and performance.

This is a spring gun and has to be cocked for each shot. It's fast, clean, inexpensive and easily maintained. Requires no gas or batteries.

37-round magazine

Removable tactical rail system

Functional safety unit

Adjustable Hop Up

Adjustable rear sight

Attention customers: The cleaning rod included with the gun is NOT the same as shown in the manual. The one included is a plain rod with nothing on the ends.

Things I liked:The guns weight and size are amazing. The tactical rail works great, and the sling is sturdy, and the mag has solid construction. Things I would have changed:the bolt is too hard to pull back, and the mag holds very little ammo. What others should know:Personally my gun had chipped paint, a dusty frame, and grease across the entire top of the gun. For me the gun came in awful condition; although it was most likely a fluke my gun had too many flaws for me to buy it again (after returning). Those things that made me not try re-buying the gun in a better physical condition were: the difficulty of pulling back the bolt, the amount of ammo the gun holds, and since i was right handed the bolt made me let go of the trigger to cock it. I believe there are other guns (specifically a multi-shot tactical shotgun) on this site that have better accuracy, better rate of fire, and more ammo.

Things I liked:This rifle closely resembles its real steel counterpart, and lives up to that reputation. It is accurate, well-built, powerful, and plain fun to use.
In addition, it is easily modified to look like a WWII M1 Garand, for those of us who collect these springers for historical replica purposes and for display.Things I would have changed:The metal, adjustable sights are some of the best, but they can and will loosen and fall apart if worked too much. Check and tighten them periodically.
Treat magazines with care, they can be fragile. Don't over-load.
The rear sling attachment is plastic and subject to breakage. Why couldn't this be metal, like the front one?
I do wish that TSD would make these rifles with a simulated wood stock. Black might be fashionable these days, but M14's are classics, and a "retro" look would be appreciated.What others should know:Like many spring rifles, this one has steel weights placed in its buttstock to simulate the weight of a real rifle. They place it off-balance to the rear. Over time, they can work loose and rattle about inside the stock. I'd remove them by CAREFULLY disassembling the stock. Fill the hollow area with styrofoam or shredded terrycloth to provide support and sound control.
I like wood stocks, so I found brown paint that bonds to plastic and sprayed the stock (with the operating system removed) with a few coats.
The gun will accept a "modified" M47 shotgun magazine. Its addition makes the rifle closely resemble an M1 Garand.